After we lost our son, Declan, I found myself in a deep sea of grief. There was no escape then, and most days I would argue the same feels true today. I think you simply learn to tread the waters of grief more easily, but the sinking feeling never leaves you. My therapist suggested that I begin writing. My first reaction was dismissal- “writing isn’t going to change a damn thing,” I thought. I was trying so desperately to hold all the pieces together so with an exhale, I shrugged and agreed to try.
It began as a handwritten journal- thoughts and entries I would jot down when I felt my heart might explode. There is power, I found, in being able to put words to paper. An exercise of control I guess. Even if I couldn’t control what was happening around me, I could control the act of documenting how I felt- capturing a moment in time.
I wrote for months. But once we had Duncan, as all mothers know, life got busy. So busy that I didn’t have the mental capacity to formulate a complete, intelligible sentence most days. “Mom Brain” is such a real and frustrating thing. This past year I’ve had such a desire to get back into writing. Maybe it's the sinking feeling creeping up, or maybe writing has unknowingly become not only an outlet for me, but a means to survival.
For the past five years, through so much of the tornado that’s become our lives, I have been running an online boutique. It has continuously evolved over that timespan, but one thing has always remained true- I don’t think that I would have made it emotionally without it. That might sound dramatic to some, but to me it screams truth. The online community gave me a distraction- something to focus on, something to build. But more than that, the space created there evolved into a tribe of women that gave me a soft place to land when life was far too harsh.
In my mind, blogging was a separate piece from my boutique- and for the longest time I knew I couldn’t juggle both and do it well, so I put it off. But that’s silly isn’t it? Why does it have to be two separate parts of my life? Why can’t I combine these tools for survival? And not just to simply survive- but to thrive.
So I made the decision that the rules were fake. I took time to rebrand my boutique into what I had always envisioned, making it community driven- a soft place to land for all women. A space to share ideas, struggles, just LIFE in all its messiness- and of course shopping ideas. So going forward, I will make time to write again. I’ll share more intimately the inner workings of my heart and mind and I’ll also share all the “boutique” goodies that I know my customers will love.
It can be both.